^' 




Class 




Knnk . /A I M fe 



SMITHSONIAK DEPOSIT 



1 



THE ORIGINAL 



Mother Goose's Melody, 



AS FIRST ISSUED BY 



JOHN NEWBERY, OF LONDON, 

ABOUT A. D., 1760. 

Reproduced \n facsimile from the edition as reprinted by 

ISAIAH THOMAS, OF WORCESTER, MASS. 

ABOUT A. D., 1785, 

WITH INTRODUCTORY NOTES BY 

WILLIAM H. WHITMORE. 




v^. 






ALBANY: 
'■ JOEL MUNSELL'S SONS. 
1889. 



COPYRIGHTED BY W. H. WHITMORE 



fiSn «<fiT x^«(fe«(>An fd&» y<Str «kJ/* fi^ f^ f^lTT^r^ ^3Srr t^ *sfc» hj/f »®r t^ rjj^ K 



PREFACE. 



MOTHER GOOSE'S MELODY. 



T?EW books in the Englifh language Have had fo great and perflftent 
circulation as the colle6lion of Nurfery Rhymes known as Mother 
Goofe's Melody. In prefenting a reprint of the earlieft known edition, 
fome bibliographical notes may be in place. 

According to my prefent knowledge, I feel fure that the original name is 
merely a tranfiation from the French ; that the colledtion was firft made for 
and by John Newbery, of London, about A. D. 1760 ; and that the great 
popularity of the book is due to the Bofton editions of Munroe ^ Francis, 
A. D. 1824-1860. 

Firft, as to the name. Writing at the great difadvantage of locality, on 
this fide of the Atlantic, in regard to EngliQi books, I can only fay that I 
have found no early mention of Mother Goofe as an Englifti perfonage. 
She does not appear to be a charadter known before the feventeenth cen- 
tury ; and with due humility, I venture to fuggeft that fuch perfonifications 
of animals feem to be foreign to Englifh modes. 



I defire to difmifs, entirely, the idea that Mother Goofe was a name 
which originated in Bofton, Mafs. In 1870, the late William A. Wheeler 
edited for Hurd & Houghton a beautiful edition of thefe melodies, and then 
claimed to identify Mother Goofe with Elizabeth Goofe, widow of one 
Ifaac Vergoofe or Goofe, and mother-in-law of Thomas Fleet, a well- 
known Bofton printer, who came here in 171 2, and died in 1758. He mar- 
ried in 1715, and is faid to have printed, in 1719, the firft colledlion of 
iMother Goofe's Melodies. 

It is true that Fleet's wife was of the Vergoofe family, and that the name 
was often contracted to Goofe. The reft of the ftory depends entirely upon 



2 Preface. 

the unfupported ftatement made by the late John Fleet Eliot (a defcendant 
of the printer), that in 1856 the late Edward A. Crowninfhield, of Bofton, 
faid that he had feen a broadfide of Fleet's edition in the library of the 
American Antiquarian Society. Repeated fearches at Worcefter have failed 
to bring to light this fuppofed copy, and no record of it appears on any cata- 
logue there. No other copy has ever been difcovered elfewhere, and it 
feems reafonable to fuppofe that Mr. Eliot mifunderftood the remarks made 
to him. 

Until fuch an example fhall be found, it is ufelefs to repeat this ftory, and 
I fhall wafte no more time upon it ; referring the inquirer to the New En- 
gland H'tjiorical and Genealogical Regijier for 1873, pp. 144 and 31 1, and the 
Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, Odlober, 1888, pp. 406— 
410. If there had been an edition printed in Bofton in 1719, we can fafely 
fay that Benjamin Franklin would have had a copy. Yet in the recent 
reprints of his Prefaces, Proverbs and Poems, as contained in the Poor 
Richard Almanacs (fee Knickerbocker Nuggets, New York, 1890), we find 
nothing that fuggefts a fingle one of thefe Melodies or any of the characters 
therein. It feems to be fimply impoflible, on reading Franklin's annotations 
in thefe Almanacs, to believe that he had ever read Mother Goofe and yet 
refrained from quoting or imitating them. It is, moreover, a very doubtful 
point, whether in 17 19 a Bofton printer would have been allowed to pub- 
lifti fuch trivial rhymes. Bofton children at that date were fed on Gofpel 
food, and it feems extremely improbable that an edition could have been fold. 



But, on the other hand, the equivalent of Mother Goofe is certainly of 
confiderable antiquity in the French language. Its great popularity dates 
back to 1697, when Charles Perrault publiftied the Nurfery Tales entitled 
" Hiftoires ou Contes du Terns Paffe, avec des Moralitez." On the front- 
ifpiece is an old woman fpinning and telling tales to a man, a girl, a little 
boy and a cat. On a placard is written 

"CONTES 
DE MA 

MERE 
LOYE." 

Thefe particulars I copy from the edition of Perrault, edited by Andrew 
Lang, Oxford, 1888, p. xxvii. 



Preface. 3 

There feems to be no doubt that " Contes de ma mere I'Oye," or Tales 
of Mother Goofe," was a popular fynonym for fairy ftories. 

Lang (p. xxiv) fays, " the term occurs in Loret's La Mufe Hiftorique 
(lettre v, 11 Juin, 1650), 

' Mais le cher motif de leur joye, 
Comme un conte de la Mere Oye, 
Se trouvant fabuleux et faux, 
lis deviendront tous bien penauts.' " 
Deulin (p. 10) fpeaking of that period quotes a remark that *'the tales of 
Miletus are fo puerile that they are fufficiently honored by comparifon with 
our tales of ' Peau d' Ane ' or ' Mere V Oye.^ " 

*■'■ Peau d' Ane" was then the typical ftory (with which infants were huflied 
to deep), and fuch were indifferently ftyled by either name. 

Other examples can be found, and fome writers conneft the legend of. 
Mother Goofe with Queen Goofe-fout (Reine Pedauce), faid to be the 
mother of Charlemagne. At all events it is as clear that flie belongs to 
French folk-lore, as that fhe is not to be found in Englifh tradition. 



Very ftrangely I am unable to ftate when Perrault's book was firft 
tranflated into Englifh. In the London Athenceum^ for 1887, I note an in- 
quiry for the Englifli edition of 17 19, but no copy was reported. Lang fays 
(Perrault's Tales, p. xxxiv), " An Englifli verfion, tranflated by Mr. Samber, 
printed for J. Pote, was advertifed, Mr. Auftin Dobfon tells me, in the 
Monthly Chronicle, March 1729." In 1745 the Tales were printed at the 
Hague, with an Englifli tranflation. (Ibid.) 

Samber's edition, of 1729, feems to be verified as probably the firft, by 
the following fa<3: : I have a copy of a book entitled "Tales of Paffed 
Times, by Mother Goofe, With Morals, written in French by M. Perrault, 
and Engliflied by R. S., Gent. To which is added a new one, viz.: The 
Difcreet Princefs. The Seventh Edition, Corrected, and adorned with fine 
Cuts. New York : Printed for J. Rivington, Bookfeller and Stationer, 
No, 56 Pearl-ftreet, 1795. 12 mo. pp. 227." 

It contains the Englifli and French verfions on oppofite pages, but the 
*' fine cuts " are not to be feen. The tranflator, R. S,, is undoubtedly 
Robert Samber, who is recorded in Allibone as tranflating a work from the 
French in 1719. 

We may alfo prefume that the reprint is from the feventh or fixth Englifli 
— 2 



4 Preface. 

edition, as I know of no earlier American iflues. Pp. 151 - 227 are covered 
by " The Difcreet Princefs," whereof the French title-page fays, " Im- 
prime Tan mdccxcv," and the Englifh " Printed in the year mdcclxiv." 
The French is dedicated to the Comtefle de Murat; the Englifh, to the 
right honorable, the Lady Mary Montagu, daughter of John, Duke of 
Montagu. As this peer died in 1749, I fufpe£t an error in the date of pub- 
lication.* 

Until, however, more is known of the bibliography of this volume, I 
think we muft accept the following fa6ts as to the name: That Mother 
Goofe was a French character, originally, and that her tales were firfl pub- 
liftied in 1696 and 1697, by Perrault ; that in 1729 their fame reached En- 
gland, and they were tranflated by Robert Samber ; when, for the firft time, 
{he was introduced to Englifh readers. 

* * * 

So much for Mother Goofe's profe " Tales," which comprifed Little 
Red-Riding-IIood, The Fairy (the fifters who drop diamonds and toads, re- 
fpe6tively, from their mouths), Blue-Beard, The Sleeping Beauty, Pufs in 
Boots, Cinderilla, Riquet with the Tuft, and Little Thumb ; eight ftories 
in all. 

We have now to confider her " Melody." Here we are brought at once 
to John Newbery, the famous publifher, of St. Paul's Churchyard, London, 
whofe Life, under the title of " A Bookfeller of the Laft Century," has 
been charmingly told by Charles Wellh (London, Griffith, Farran, Okeden 
& Welfh, 1885). Newbery was the firft Englifh publifher to prepare little 
ftory-books for children, and his fuccefs is amply fhown in the notices of his 
contemporaries and fuccefTors. In 1765 he publifhed The Hiftory of Little 
Goody Two-Shoes (reprinted in fac-fimile by Charles Welfh, in 1882), a 
ftory very generally afcribed to Oliver Goldfmith. At all events Gold- 
fmith was a conftant writer for Newbery from 1762 to 1767, when the 
latter died ; and feme of this literary work was undoubtedly for the chil- 
dren's books. 



* Lang says, p. xxvi, " by some unexplained accident a story of Madamoiselle L'Heritier's ' V Adreite Prin- 
£•««,' slipped into editions of Perrault's Ci7«/<rj, in 1721, if not earlier, and holds its place, even now. The 
author was Mile. L'Heritier de Villaudon, a relation of Perrault's." She printed her volume in 1696. Charles 
Deulin (Les Contes de Ma Mere L'Oye,avant Perrault, Paris, 1878), says, p. 38, that Finette,ou V Adroite Prin- 
cesse, was long attributed to Perrault, though now restored to the right owner : that it was dedicated to the Comt- 
esse de Murat, and (p. 21) that it appeared in the same year as Perrault's " La Belle au Bois Dormant," which 
latter was printed first, in 1696, in Moetjen's Receuil, vol. v, printed at The Hague. 

It is a matter of doubt whether the real collector of these Tales was not Charles Perrault's son, and that the 
father merely revised them and added the poetry. 



Preface. 5 

In Mr. Welfh's careful lift of Newbery's publications, we find nnention 
of " Mother Goofe's Tales." He fays : *' The feventh edition was 
printed May i6th, 1777, and between that date and March, 1779, Carnan 
& Newbery took 1,710 out of the 3,000 copies printed by Collins of Salis- 
bury. It confifted of four-and-a-half (heets, long primer. Three thoufand 
copies coft £18 13.6. The eighth ifl'ued September 4, 1780." 

It is impoflible at prefent to learn when Newbery firft iffued the Tales, or 
whether the feven editions were thofe printed by him or were numbered 
from the firft Englifli iflue. It is evident, however, that we have brought 
together the title, " Mother Goofe," and the publiftier, Newbery. 

December 28, 1 780, Thomas Carnan entered for copyright, *' Mother 
Goofe's Melody, or, Sonnets for the Cradle, etc.," giving the full title as 
printed in the lift in our American reprint, Carnan was the ftepfon of John 
Newbery, and fucceeded to the bufinefs, in partneilhip with Francis New- 
bery, nephew of John. Francis died in 1780, but the firm continued fome 
two years. Mr. Welfti kindly informs me that he thinks it probable that 
1780, the date of the copyright, was not neceflarily that of the firft ifliie of 
the book, but rather that the copyright was taken out in conne6lion with the 
winding-up of the copartnerftiip, on Francis Newbery's death. 

So far as we now know, no publiftier, except Newbery, was ufing the 
title of "Mother Goofe," from 1760 to 1780; the profe Tales had evi- 
dently been a fuccefs ; and, to quote Mr. Welfti's opinion, as that of a 
moft competent judge, " it is quite in accordance with Newbery's pra6tice 
to have utilized it for his Melodies for the Nurfery." 

If, as feems moft probable, the firft edition of " Mother Goofe's Melody " 
was iffued prior to John Newbery's death, in 1767, there is an interefting 
queftion as to who prepared the coUedlion for the prefs. The rhymes are 
avowedly the favorites of the nurfery, but the preface and the foot notes are 
an evident burlefque upon more pretentious works. The firft and moft 
natural conclufion is that we may trace therein the hand of Goldfmiih, an 
opinion held by Mr. VVelfti. The probability, or even poflibility, of this 
idea, would give an added intereft to this colle6lion. 

Forfter, in his Life of Goldfmith, gives proof that Goldfmith was very 
fond of children and was familiar with nurfery rhymes and games. Thus 
he writes (Vol. II, p. 71), that Mifs Hawkins fays : " I little thought what 
I fhould have to boaft, when Goldfniith taught me to play "Jack and Jill, by 
two bits of paper on his fingers." 



6 Preface. 

But the moft curious bit of evidence is the following from Vol. II, p. 122 : 

January 29, 1768, Goldfmith's play of the "Good-natured Man" was 
produced. He went to dine with his friends after it. " Nay, to imprefs 
his friends Itill more forcibly with an idea of his magnanimity, he even fung 
his favorite ibng, which he never confented to fing but on fpecial occafions, 
about An old Woman tojjed in a Blanket feventeen times as high as the Moon^ 
and was altogether very noify and loud." 

Our readers will find this identical " favorite fong " in the preface to 
Newbery's ••' Mother Goofe's Melody," p. 7, dragged in without any excufe, 
but evidently becaufe it was familiar to the writer. This coincidence is 
certainly of fome force. 

Newbery and Carnan did not fucceed in keeping a monopoly of thefe 
Rhymes. In the American Antiquarian Society's Proceedings for 1888, I 
found a ftatement that in the Bodleian Library at Oxford, there were two 
copies of Mother Goofe, printed about A. D. 1700. I am informed by 
Mr. Allnutt that this is entirely wrong. One copy is on paper which has 
the water mark of 1803, and the other has the imprint "London, Printed 
and Sold by John Marfhall, No. 4, Aldermary Church-Yard, Bow-Lane, 
and No. 17 Queen Street, Cheapfide. Price Three-Pence, Bound and Gilt." 

This John Marfhall, he adds, was a contemporary and rival of Carnan, 
and publifhed children's books during the latter half of the i8th century 
and beginning of the prefent. " The contents are identical with yours, but 
fome of the pieces toward the end are fomewhat differently arranged. The 
ciits are very fimilar with the addition of a frontifpiece reprefenting a family 
group at leffons. There are 92 pages, followed by a lift of children's books 
fold by John Marfhall. 

Not improbably it was fome fuch piracy as this which made Carnan 
copyright his book in December, 1780, as already noted. 

It may be mentioned here, however, that with the diflblution of the New- 
bery firm, and with the change in the tafte for children's books, at the be- 
ginning of the prefent century, the Englifti chain of evidence is broken, 
happily to the reftored in this country, as will be ftiown. Mother Goofe's 
Melodies are again to be found in Englifti nurferies, but in fome inftances, 
at leaft, they are reprinted from American exemplars. 

* * * 

In 1842 the late James O. Halliwell edited for the Percy Society, " The 
Nurfery Rhymes of England, Collected principally from Oral Tradition." 
In his preface, he writes, " thefe traditional nonfenfe-fcraps have come 



Preface. 7 

down to us in fuch numbers, that in the (hort fpace of three years the editor 
of the prefent volume had colle6led confiderably more than a thoufand. A 

fele6lion is here prefented to the reader I may here alfo take 

the opportunity of ftating, that it was originally my intention to have intro- 
duced, alfo, a colle6lion of merriments, upon which many of thefe rhymes 
are founded, but the proje6l was over-ruled by a gentleman who gave it as 
his opinion, that the Society would, by their publication, be involved in an 
awkward queftion of copyright. I was not previoufly aware that 'Goody- 
Two-Shoes,' and romances of this kind were regarded so jealoufly by the 

trade." 

He adds : " I am in pofleffion of a curious and clever fatirical pamphlet, 
entitled, ' Infant Inftitutes,' 8vo, London, 1797, to which I am indebted for 
fome interefting fcraps," 

Leaving Halliwell for the moment, with the remark that he does not men- 
tion Jofeph Ritfon's " Gammer Gurton's Garland," of 1810, I will take up 
the " Infant Inftitutes." 

In Notes and ^eries for June, 1875 (5th S. iii, 441), the late learned 
muiician, Prof. Edward F. Rimbault, defcribed an o6lavo pamphlet of 69 
pages, entitled, "Infant Inftitutes, part the firft, or, a Nurferical EfTay on 
the Poetry, Lyric and Allegorical, of the Earlieft Ages, ^c. London : 
printed for and fold by F. y C. Rivingtons, St. Paul's Churchyard, 1797." 
It is afcribed to Rev. Baptift Noel Turner, M.A., re6lor of Denton, 
CO. Line, and of Wing, co. Rutland. Dr. Rimbault fays : " The eflay 
(hows confiderable learning, and was evidently intended to ridicule the 
Shakefperian commentators. It is now chiefly interefting, as giving us 
the earliefi printed verfions of fome of our well-known nurfery ditties.- 
Thefe rhymes were firft colle6led by Ritfon, in his Gammer Gurton's Gar- 
land, printed for R. Triphook, in 18 10, and have fince been reproduced by 
Halliwell and a hoft of imitators. None of thefe colle£lors, as far as I am 
aware, has referred to Mr. Turner's Effay." He then cites various, Nurfery 
Rhymes, and points out the variations in Ritfon's copies. 

In the Gentleman's Magazine for 1826, part ii, pp. 467-9, is an obituary 
of Rev. B. N. Turner, prepared in part from his own notes. It mentions 
various of his writings and ftates that " in 1791 he publiftied a political fatire 
called 'Infant Inftitutes,' 'fraught,' he obferves, 'with matter so eccentric 
and laughable as might chance to arreft the attention and raife the fpirit of 
the public' " This difpofes of any doubts as to the authorftiip of this col- 
leilion of nurfery rhymes. 

It is a ftrange fa6t, however, that Ritfon's " Garland " confifts of four 



g Preface. 

parts ; and his brief preface reads as follows : " Parts I and II were firft 
colleded and printed by a literary gentleman, deceafed, who fuppofed he had 
preferved each piece according to its original edition ; an opinion not eafily 
refuted, if worth fupporting. Parts III and IV are now firft added." 

As I have been unable to fee a copy of the " Infant Inftitutes," I cannot 
fay whether it is identical with Parts I and II of Ritfon. If it be, the 
inference is that Ritfon was mifinformed as to the author, as Mr. Turner 
was a prominent clergyman and was alive when Ritfon wrote, dying May 
18th 1826, aged 86. If it be not, we have ftill to find a copy of the book 
on this fubje<a " firfl collected and printed by a literary gentleman deceafed," 
before 1810; and alfo to explain why Ritfon knew nothing of the Infant 
Inftitutes of 1797.* Very poflibly the hS: will be proved that prior to 
1797, fome '^ literary gentleman " had publiftied the book which Ritfon ufed, 
and that it ferved as the model for Turner to travefty as "a political fatire." 
At all events, here is one volume, if not two, treating on Nurfery Rhymes, 
printed between Newbery's "Mother Goofe's Melody," of 1780, and 
Ritfon's " Gammer Gurton's Garland," of 18 10. Whoever firft printed 
Parts I and II of Ritfon's " Garland," certainly abfDibed therein almoft the 
whole of Newbery's book; of courfe from a printed copy. This fadt is 
indifputable, becaufe Newbery's *' Mother Goofe " contains fifty-two Nur- 
fery Rhymes, and of tliefe, thirty-feven are in Ritfon, moft of them in iden- 
tical words, and feveral in the fame confecutive order. 
Ritfon's colleftion is the following : 

"Gammer Gurton's Garland; or, the Nurfery ParnaflTus. A choice 
colle6lion of pretty fongs and verfes, for the amufement of all little good 
children who can neither read nor run. London: printed for R. Friphook, 
37 St, James ftreet, by Harding^ Wright, St. John's fquare, 1810." i2mo. 
pp. 46. It is divided into four parts, and contains many rhymes not in 
Newbery's book, but which have fince been incorporated into "Mother 
Goofe's Melody," as ufed for the lafc half century. 

In 1842, Halliwell printed his coUeftion, pp. 192, for the Percy Soci- 
ety. Although he does not mention Ritfon's book, it is evident that he 
pofiTefiTed and ufed it, as nearly all of Ritfon is contained in his book. Hal- 
liwell, being a great colledor and annotator of Shakefperian literature, en- 
riched his work with fome valuable notes. His book, being much larger 
than its predeceflbrs, has been the ftore-houfe from which later editions of 
" Mother Goofe " have been increafed in fize, often to the injury of their 

* Dr. Rimbanlt must have read Ritson very carelessly, as he cites two rhymes which, he says, are in the " In- 
stitutes," and not in Ritson. Yet both are in Ritson's Part III . 



Preface. g 

fitnefs. It is undoubtedly fair to abate fomewliat Halliwell's claim that his 
rhymes were " collefted principally from oral tradition," fince he utilized 
three printed predecefTors. It is very unfortunate, alfo, that he did not ac- 
knowledge the fources from which he copied, and devote a few pages to the 
bibliography of the fubje6t. 

In Notes and ^eries for 20th January, 1877 (5th S., vii, 54), I note that 
the preface to a fifth edition of Halliwell is dated December, 1853 ' ^"^ ^^^^ 
there was a iixth edition of 333 pages, printed for John Ruffell Smith, of 
London. In 1877 the copyright was owned by Frederick Warne "^ Co., 
and the book " has been incorporated with Mrs. Valentine's Nurfery 
Rhymes, Tales and Jingles." 



We muft now refume the hiftory of Newbery's original "Mother Goofe's 
Melody " The Englifh editions have pra6tically difappeared ; at leaft Mr. 
Welfti writes that he has never been able to fee an example of Newber^^'s 
print. But, fortunately, Ifaiah Thomas, of Worcefter, Mafs., soon after 
the Revolution, took up the bufinefs of reprinting ftory books for children, 
and copied many of Newbery's favorite iflaes. A number of thefe are 
cited in the advertifement annexed to this " Melody." The moft noted, 
perhaps, of all thefe Newbery books, was the Hiftory of Little Goody Two- 
Shoes. A reprint of this was iflued by Mr. Welfh (London, 1882), a fac- 
fimile of the third edition of 1766. The beft authorities attribute this little 
ftory to Goldfmith. In the Bofton Public Library is a beautiful copy of 
Thomas's reprint, dated Worcefter, 1787, which is a page-for-page repro- 
dudlion, but probably from Newbery's firft edition. The cuts are evidently 
done over, and imitate very well the originals ; but towards the end of the 
book they vary in details from Mr. Welfti's example. There is no neces- 
fity, therefore, to prefume that Thomas imported the cuts which had been 
ufed by Newbery. He did, indeed, flightly alter the publiftier's perfonal 
notes, which Newbery was fond of inferting, fubftituting Worcefter for Lon- 
don, etc. 

In 1787 Thomas printed the following : 

" The Juvenile Biographer ; containing the Lives of little Mafters and 
Miffes; including a Variety of Good and Bad Chara6lers. By a little 
Biographer. The firft Worcefter edition. Worcefter (Maflachufetts), 
printed by Ifaiah Thomas, and fold at his Book Store. Sold, alfo, by E. 
Battelle, Bofton. M. D. CC. LXXX VII." Pp. 119. 



lO 



Preface. 



Annexed is the following very full lift of other publications, including 
Mother Goofe's Melody : 



The Brother's Gift. 

The Sifter's Gift. 

The Father's Gift. 

The Mother's Gift. 

The Fairing. 

The Sugar-Plumb. 

The Hiftory of Little Goody Two 

Shoes. 
Tom Thumb's Exhibition. 
Mother Goofe's Melody. 
Little Robin Red Breaft. 
Tom Thumb's Play-Book. 
The Little Puzzling Cap. 
The Big Puzzling Cap. 



The Travels of Robinfon Crufoe. 
Hagar in the Defert ( from the 

French). 
The Beauty and the Monfter. 
Hiftory of the Holy Jefus. 
Be Merry and Wife. 
The Natural Hiftory of Four-footed 

Beafts. By Tommy Trip. 
The Holy Bible abridged. 
The Hiftory of Little King Pippin. 
A Bag of Nuts. By Thomas 

Thumb. 
Nurfe Truelove's New Year's Gift. 



I am informed by E, M. Barton, Efq., that in the American Antiquarian 
Society's Library there are copies of the "Hiftory of the Holy Jefus," 
" Nurfe Truelove's New Year's Gift," and the " Entertaining Stories," all 
iflued by Thomas in I786,]and all containing the advertifeinent of" Mother 
Goofe's Melody." We feem, therefore, juftified in placing the firft iffiie 
of this latter at about 1785. 

By the kindnefs of Miss Caroline M. Hewins, of the Public Library, 
Hartford, Coim., I have a full copy of one of Thomas"'s moft chara6ler- 
iftic reprints, which I place here on account of the full and interefting lift 
of his publications. The book is entitled, " The Pidture Exhibition, con- 
taining the Original Drawings of eighteen Difciples. To which are added, 
Moral and Hiftorical Explanations, Publiftied under the Infpe6lion of 
Mr. Peter Paul Rubens, Profeflbr of Polite Arts. Printed at Worcefter, 
Maflachufetts, by Ifaiah Thomas, and fold, Wholefale and Retail, at his 
Bookftore. M DCC LXXX VHL" 



No. 



Contents. 
The Moufetrap, by Mafter Hayman. 
A Battle Scene, by Mafter Broughton. 
A Winter Piece, by Mafter Vandyke. 
Rural Simplicity, by Mifs Grignion. 
The Taking of the Birds' Neft, by Mafter Avis. 



Preface. 



II 



No. 6. 

7- 
8. 



10. 

II. 

12. 

13- 
14. 

15 

16. 

17- 
18. 



The Idler, by Mafter Johnfon. 

The Shadowift ; a Fancy Piece, by Mafter ZofFani. 

The Waftiing of the Lions at the Tower, by Mafter Green. 

The Judgment of Areopagus ; a Hiftorical Piece ; by Mafter 

Clement. 
The Creation of the World, by Mafter Adam. 
A Dog, by Mafter Lane. 
The Truant Player, by Mafter Thoughtful. 
The Temple of Fame, by Mafter Ravenet. 
The Hunting of the Cat, by Mafter Nimrod. 
A Time Piece, by Mifs Prudence. 
The Lottery, by Mafter Rubens. 
Leap Frog, by Mr. Godfery Kneller. 
The Dreamer, a Fancy Piece, by Mafter Dormer. 



The advertifement has no fpec'al value, but the annexed lift of Thomas's 
publications is very full and interefting. I have numbered the titles for con- 
venience in reference. 

Books for Mafters and MifTes of all ages, which will make them wife 
and happy. Printed and fold by Ifaiah Thomas, at his Bookftore in Wor- 
cefter, Maffachufetts, all ornamented with Cuts, and prectily bound. 

The following are all price four Cents each, or four federal coppers, viz : 

1. Nurfe Truelove's Chriftmas Box. 

2. The Father's Gift ; or, the Way to be wife. 

3. The Brother's Gift ; or, the naughty Girl reformed. 

4. The Sifter's Gift ; or, the naughty Boy reformed. 

5. The Little Puzzlmg Cap *, or, a Collection of pretty Riddles. 

6. The Royal Alphabet; or. Child's beft Inftruflor ; to which is added 

the Hiftory of a little Boy found under a Haycock. 

7. The Death and Burial of Cock Robbin ; with the tragic Death of 

A, Apple Pye. 

8. The remarkable Hiftory of Tom Jones, a Foundling. 

9. Tom Thumb's Folio; or, a Three penny play Thing for Little Giants; 

to which is added an Abftradl of the Life of Mr. Thumb. 

10. Entertaining Tales, for General Instruction. 

11. Jacky Dandy's Delight ; or, the Hiftory of Birds and Beafts. 

12. The renowned Hiftory of Giles Gingerbread, a little boy who lived on 

learning. 



12 Preface. 

13. The Hiftory of Mafter Jackey and Mifs Harriot; with iMaxims for 

the Improvement of the Mind. 

14. The Travels of Robinfon Crufoe. Written by himfelf. 
[With many others of the fame Size and Price.] Alfo, 

15. Tom Thumb's Play Boole, to teach children their Letters as foon as 

they can fpeak. Being a new and pleafant method to allure 
little ones in the firft Principles of Learning. Price only two 
Pence. 

The following are all price eight Cents each": 

16. The Fairing ; or, a golden Toy for Children of all Sizes and Denom- 

inations. 

17. The Liliputian Mafquerade. 

18. Virtue and Vice ; or, the Hiftory of Charles Careful and Harry Heed- 

lefs, ftiowing the good EfFedls of continued Prudence. 

19. Nurfe Truelove's New Year's Gift, &c. 

20. Hagar in the Defert. Tranflated from the French. 
20.* New Song Book, 

21. A Little Lottery Book for Children ; Containing a new method of 

playing them into a knowledge of Letters and Figures, &c. 

22. Hiftory of the Holy Jefus. Containing a brief and plain Account of 

his Birth, Life, Death, Refurredtion and Afcenfion into 
Heaven; and his coming again at the great and laft Day of 
Judgment. 

The following are to be fold at eight Pence each, viz . 

23. The Mother's Gift ; or a Prefent for all little children who want to 

be good. In two volumes. 

24. The Royal Primer ; or, an Eafy Guide to the Art of Reading. 

25. The big Puzzling Cap ; or, a Collection of Riddles. 

26. Mother Goofe's Melody, or Sonnets for the Cradle; being a CoUeftion 

of all the famous Songs of nurfes, ornamented with numerous 
Cuts. 

27. A Bag of Nuts, ready cracked; being a Colle6lion of Fables, Riddles 

and Conundrums. 

28. The Lottery Book; with Mr. C.'s Alphabet fet to mufick. 

29. The Beauty and the Monfter. Tranflated from the French. 



Preface. 13 

The following are fold at one Shilling each : 

30. The Holy Bible abridged; or, the Hiftory of the Old and New Tes- 

tament. Illuftrated with Notes and adorned with Cuts. For 
the Ufe of Children. 

31. Little Robin Red Breaft ; a Collediion of pretty Songs, for Children, 

entirely new. 

32. The Hiftory of Little Goody Two-Shoes, otherwife called Mrs. Mar- 

gery Twoftioes. With the Means by which flie acquired 
her learning and Wifdom ; and in confequence thereof her 
Eftate. 
33.^ The Sugar Plumb ; or. Sweet amufement for Leifure Hours ; Being 
an entertaining and inftruftive Colle6lion of Stories, Embel- 
lifhed with curious Cuts. 

34. Be Merry and Wife ; or, the Cream of Jefts and the Marrow of 

Maxims. 

35. The Juvenile Biographer; Containing the Lives of Little Matters and 

Mifles : including a Variety of good and bad Charadlers. 

36. A little pretty Pocket Book, intended for the Instru6tion of Mafter 

Tommy and Mifs Polly, with Letters from Jack the Giant 
Killer ; to which is added a little Song Book, and Rules for 
Behaviour. 

37. The Picture Exhibition, moral and hiftorical, well calculated to im- 

prove the mind. 

38. A pretty New Year's Gift ; or, Entertaining Hiftories for the Amufe- 

ment and Instru6lion of young Gentlemen and Ladies in Win- 
ter Evenings. By Solomon Soberfides. 

39. The natural Hiftory of four-footed Beafts. By Tommy Trip. 

40. Mafter Columbus's Natural Hiftorv of Birds and Beafts. In 2 vols. 

41. Solomon Winlove's approved Colleilion of Entertaining Stories. 

42. Vice in its Proper Shape ; or, the wonderful and melancholy Trans- 

formation of feveral naughty Mafters and Mifles into thofe 
contemptible Animals which they moft refembled in Difpofi- 
tion. Printed for the Benefit of all good Boys and Girls. 

The following are price i^. 2d. each : 

43. A poetical Defcription of Song Birds, with a Drawing of each ; inter- 

fperfed with Songs, Fables and Tales. 

44. The adventures of a Pincufhion. Defigned chiefly for the ufe of 

Young Ladies. 



14 Preface. 

45. Memoirs of a Peg Top. 

46. The Holiday Prefent, containing Anecdotes of a worthy Family. 

The following are price is, 8^. each. 

47. The Remarkable and Surprifing Adventures of David Simple; con- 

taining an account of his Travels through the cities of Lon- 
don and Weftminfter. 

48. The Adventures of Roderick Random ; containing the Remarkable 

Accidents which happened to him and his friend Strap, the 
Barber. 

49. The Hiftory of Amelia; or, a Defcription of a Young Lady; who, 

from a great Fortune was reduced almoft to Poverty ; 
with an Account of her recovering it ; for which he [j/V.] 
was hanged. 

50. The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, &c. 
[With many others of the fame Size and Price.] 

Two fpecimens of Thomas's reprint of Mother Goofe's Melody, each 
lacking the title page, have been preferved ; and it is from one now owned 
bv the prefent editor that the following pages are printed in fac-fimile. It 
will be noted that the original confifts of very fmall pages, four being placed 
on a page of our copy. 



It is impoflible to fay how long thefe A-Ielodies were iflued by Thomas ; 
we only ftrike fure ground in the editions printed at Bofton, for Munroe ^ 
Francis. 

Edmund Munroe and David Francis, printers and bookfellers, began bufi- 
nefs in 1 801. In 1822 and 1823 they kept at 4 Cornhill, which was the 
foutherly corner of the prefent Wafliington and Water ftreets. From 1825 
to 1840, their ftore is called 128 Wafhington ftreet ; after 1841 they were 
in Devonfhire ftreet, corner of Spring Lane. 

The name of Cornhill was changed to Wafhington ftreet in 1824, and 
although they remained in the fame ftore, the defignation was altered. They 
iflued an edition of Mother Goofe, which I am about to defcribe, and 
though undated, it defcribes them as at 128 Waftiington ftreet. The very 
perfect copy now owned by Jofeph W, Robbins, of Bofton, has infcribed 
in it by his infant hand, " in the year 1827." We are thus afllired that the 
iflTue was not earlier than 1824 "or ^^^s*" ^^an 1827. So, again, on p. 115, 



Preface. 15 

we find the early fong of " See-faw facradown, which is the way to Bofton 
town," amended by the addition of thefe two lines : 

" Boston town's changed into a city, 
But I've no room to change my ditty." 

As we know, Bofton was chartered in 1822. 

The feventy cuts are there, and are very creditable to the artifts. Bowen's 
name is figned to one, and his initials to feveral more. N. D., /'. e. Nathan- 
iel Dearborn, is on feveral, and one is figned, apparently, " Chicket's, fc." 
Evidently, Munroe y Francis intended to do their beft. 

The laft page is figned " Jemima Goofe," which is interefting, as evidence 
that no one then aflbciated the book with Elizabeth Vertigoofe, the mother- 
in-law of John Fleet. 

The book is about four and a half inches tall and three and a half inches 
wide; the type three and nine-fixteenths inches tall, two and feven-eighths 
inches wide. 

It feems certain that the compiler of this edition had accefs to Newbery's 
original, or, more probably, to Thomas's reprint. On p, 44, the footnote 
is reprinted from one of thefe, almoft verbatim : and no two independent 
writers would have fo agreed. Again, on p. 80, Newbery's title is copied, 
*' A logical fong, or, the conjurer's reafon for not getting money." More- 
over, this fong leems to be peculiar to Newbery, not being in Gammer 
Gurton's Garland. So, again, Munroe y Francis's book- has the well known 
quatrain, "Jog on, jog on, the foot path way," which is in Newbery, in 
the fecond or Shakefperian portion. It is not in Ritfon nor Halliwell. It 
is to be found in the " Winter's Tale," acS: iv, fcene iii. It is curious to 
note that the fecond line in Shakefpeare reads, 

"And merrily hent the stile, a." 

This verb '■ hent," being obfolete in the laft century, is replaced here by 
"mend;" but later it is tranflated as "jump," which feems to be the 
meaning. 

In iddi. an exa£t comparifon fhows that out of fifty one titles in Newbery 
forty-eight are in the Bofton edition. The three omitted are — 

p. 23. There was an old woman. 

p. 57. A long tailed pig. 

p. 72. Piping hot. 

AH of which would be defervedly omitted now. 

—3 



i6 Preface. 

It is much more difficult to decide whence Munroe y Francis obtained 
the additions which fo increafed their book. A portion is evidently modern, 
as for example Sir Walter Scott's " Pibroch of Donnell Dhu," which ap- 
peared in 1816. But many of thofe melodies which are not in Newbery's 
book, and are in this, are to be found in Ritfon ; they are, beyond queftion, 
of confiderable antiquity. 

The outlide cover of this book reads, on the front, 

BOSTON : 
Printed by Munroe & Francis, 
128 Washington Street. 

Then comes the true title, as ftiown in fac-Jimi/e : 

^0t%<t ^00$^'$ G^mvt0 1 

OR 

SOME OP WHICH 

HIVE RECSNTLT BEEN DISCOTEBED AMOBTO THE 

MANUSCRIPTS IN HERCULANEUM, 

AND OF COUaSE BATE BT^TER BEFORE APPEARED IS PaiHT 

THE OTHERS 

OILIOCKTLT COMPARED WITH TBE EMENDATIONS OP, THE HOST 

APPROVED ANNOTATORS, 

THE TROE BSADI5G9 RESTORED, AND CORRUPTIONS EXPnNO.BO. 

WITH COPIOUS EffCRjinftGS. 



COSTON : 

PUBLISHED BY MONROE AND FRANCIS, 
Na I2« WASHINGTON SXaEET 



Preface. 17 

Then follow 118 pages, and I give 2i fac-fimile of the laft page. The 
outfide cover, rear, reprefents an old woman fitting in a chair, talking to a 
little boy and girl; under this cut, 128 Waftiington Street: 

118 MOTHER GOOSEYS MELODIES 



WW«/W« 



John O'Gudgeon was a wild man, 
He wbipt his children now and then. 
When he whipt theili he made them dance 
Out of Ireland into Franc©* 

Little Jack Nor/ 

Told -me a story. 
How he try*d cock-horse to ride. 
Sword and scabbard by his side, 
Sacldle, leaden spurs, and switches. 
His pocket tight with cents a;ll bright. 
Marbles, tops, counters, props. 
Now he's put in jacket and breeches. 



%w\w«v 



Ofle-ery, you-ery, e-kery, haven, 
HoUow-bone, tollow-bone, ten or eleven. 
Spin, spon, must be done, 
Hollow..bone, tollofW \^<ix\t, twenty-one> 

JEMIMA GOOSE 

As this edition, as will be fliown, is fubftantially the fame as that copy- 
righted in 1833, and is the parent of all later iffues, I fubjoin a table of con- 
tents. The pages cited in the left-hand margin are thofe of the edition of 
1833. The items marked with a ftar are thofe found in Newbery's and 
Thomas's edition. Thofe marked C. have a wood-cut; in many cafes the 
illufbration takes the greater part of the page. 

A few of the more interefting and peculiar rhymes are quoted in full. It 
fhould be added, that in this edition of Munroe y Francis, quite a number 
of verbal changes were made from Thomas's text ; but it is needlefs to 
fpecify them: 



i8 Preface. 

Contents. Munroe iff Francis Edition, 1824. 

The north wind doth blow. 

a. Little boy blue, blow your horn. 

b. In the month of fweet April. [Altered in 1833.] 

c. Shoe the horfe and flioe the mare. 
Baa, baa, black fheep. [N. p. 59.] 

a. This little pig went to market. [N. p. 54.] 

b. Let us go the wood fays this pig. 

I had a little hufband no bigger than my thumb. 

a. Cold and raw the north winds blow. 

b. Bye, baby bunting. 

c. Hufti-a-bye baby, lie ftill with thy daddy. 

a. When I was a little boy, I lived by myfelf. [N. p. 51.] 

b. Great A, little a, bouncing B. [N. p. 28] 

a. " Ride a cock horfe to Banbury crofs 
To fee what Tommy can buy." [N. p. 33.] 

b. Ride away, ride away, Johnny fliall ride. 
Sing, fing, what fhall I fing? 
Jack Sprat could eat no fat. [N. p. 43.] 

a. Telltale tit. [N. p. 45.] 

b. Peafe porridge hot. [N. p 41.] 

a. Little King Boggen he built a fine hall. 

b. How many days has my baby to play. 

c. Wafh me and comb me. 
[^Cut here in white line Chiket's fc] Cufliy cow, bonny, 

let down your milk. 

a. Three wife men of Gotham. [N. p. 21.] 

b. Harry come parry, when will you marry. 
Robert Barns, fellow fine. 

a. Pat a cake, pat a cake, baker's man. [N. p. 49.] 

b. Ride a cock horfe to Banbury crofs. 
To fee an old woman jump on a black horfe. [Altered in 

1833-] 

c. How many miles to Babylon. 
There was an old woman lived under a. hill. [N. p. 24.] 
[N.D.] Hark, hark, the dogs do bark. 
[AB.] The man in the moon came down too foon. 



1833 1824 

edition, edition. 

Page. Page. 


3- 


5- 


C. 


23- 


6. 




20. 






23- 






5- 


*7. 
*8. 


c. 


85. 


9- 


C. 


23- 


10. 




12. 






52. 






10. 


*ii. 


c. 


38. 


* 




58. 


*I2. 


c. 


52. 






II. 


U' 


c. 


72. 


*i4. 


c. 


39- 


*i5. 


c. 


40. 


* 




50. 


16. 




44. 






62. 






13- 


17- 


c. 


62 


*i8. 


c. 


63 






70 


19. 


c. 


44 


*20. 




32 






59 






18 


*2I. 


c. 


26 


22. 


c. 


9 


23- 


c. 



Preface. 
1.883 1824 Contents, etc.— Continued. 

edition, edition. ' 

Page. Page. 

18. *24. a. Shoe the colt. [N. p. 30.] 

28. b. Lavender blue and Rofemary Green. 

c. Rain, rain, go awa/. 

There was an old woman who lived in a (hoe. 
Hey, my kitten, my kitten. [N. p. 53.] 
I'll fing you a fong, of the days that are long. 

a. The lion and the unicorn. 

b. Arthur O'Bower has broken his band. 
To bed, to bed, fays Sleepy-Head. 
Blefs you, blefs you, burnie-bee, 

Tell me where my true love be. [10 lines, modern.] 
Hufh-a-bye, baby, upon the tree-top. [N. p. 39,] 

a. Diglety diddledy, my mammy's maid. 

b. There was a man of our town. [N. p. 55.] 
Ding, dong, bell, PulTy cat's in the well. [N. p. 25.] 

a. Little Johnnie Pringle had a little pig. [N. p. 15.] 

b. The rofe is red, the violet blue. 
Sing a fong of fixpence. 

a. Continued. 

b. Lady bird, lady bird, fly away home. 
*37. C. a. Who comes here, a Grenadier. [N. p. 42.] 

b. "Kit and Kitterit and Kitterit's mother. 
All went over the bridge together-, 
The bridge broke down, they all fell in, 
'Good luck go with you,' fays Tom Bolin." 
Johnny (hall have a new bonnet. 
[Bowen, fc.J Bobby Shaftoe's gone to fea. 

a. "Hey! rub-a-dub, ho! rub-a-dub, three maids in a tub, 
And who do you think were there.'' 
The butcher, the baker, the candlefl-ick maker, 
And all of them gone to the fair." 

15. * b. Alfred and Richard were two pretty men. [N. p. 60.] 

50. 41. C. a, Tom, Tom, the piper's fon. 
64. b. Jog on, jog on, the footpath way. 

And merrily jump the ftyle, a'. [N. p. 91.] 
*42. a. Little Jack Horner. [N. p. 40.] 

—4 



34 


. 25. 


C. 


24 


*26. 




64 


27. 


C. 


28 


28. 


c. 


35 






51 


29. 


c. 




30- 


c. 


36 


*3i. 


c. 


51 


32- 




41. 


* 




46. 


*33- 


c. 


29. 


*34- 




37- 






7- 


35- 
36. 


c. 


8. 






33- 


*37- 


c. 


25. 







32. 


38- 




55- 


39- 


C. 


35. 


40. 


C. 



20 Preface. 

1833 .1824 Contents, etc. — Continued. 

edition, edition. ' 

Page. Page. 

77. b. There was a piper had a cow. 

53. 43. C. Pretty John Watts, We are troubled with rats. 

*44. a. fHigh diddle diddle, the cat and the fiddle. [N. p. 32.] 

f[FooT NOTE. — "Surely it muft have been a little dog, for a great dog 
would have been too wife to laugh at fuch nonfenfe."] 
b. Robin a bobbin, the big bellied hen. 
[Same as cover.] 
45. C. Little Mifs Muffett. 
15. *46. C. a. Round about, round about, Goofeberry pie. [N p 36.] 
73, * b. The fow came in with a faddle. [N. p. 63.] 

57. *47. C. Boys and girls come out to play. [N. p, 66.] 

48. a. Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. 

b. As I went in the garden, I faw five brave maids. 
69. c. The girl in the lane. That could not fpeak plain. 

37. 49. C. a. There was an old woman and what do you think. 
b. "Oneery, you-ery, ekery, Ann, 
Phillify, follyfy, Nicholas, John. 
Quee-bee, quaw-bee, Irifli Mary, 
Stinkle-em, ftankle-em, buck." 
There were two birds fat upon a flone. [N. p. 38.] 
Little Johnny Tucker, Sing for your fupper. [N. p. 26,] 

a. "There was a little man, And he had a little gun, 
And his bullets were made of lead ; 
He fhot John Sprig, Through the middle of his wig, 
And knocked it right off his head." 

b. There was a man and he had naught. 
Jemmy Jed went into the fhed. 

a. PufTy cat, pufTy cat, where have you been. 

b. ''Liar, liar, lickfpit. 
Turn about the candleftick; 
What is good for liars 
Brimftone and fires." 

55. C. "See -faw, down in my lap, 
Up again on her feet ; 
Little girl loft her white cap. 
Blown away in the ftreet.** 



19. 


*5o. 


C 


74- 


*5i. 


C 


68. 


52. 





45- 




59- 


53. c. 


56. 


54. c. 



Preface. 21 

1833. 1824. Contents, etc. — Continued. 

edition, edition. 
Page. Page. 

60. *56. Trip upon trenchers (flightly altered). [N. p. 17.] 
*57. C. "Three children playing on the ice 

All on a fummer's day ; 
As it fell out, they all fell in, ^ 

The reft they ran away. 

'* Now had thefe children been at fchool, 
Or playing on dry ground, 
Ten thoufand pounds to a fingle cent 

They had not all been drowned." [N. p. 47.] 

4. 58. a. There was a mad man. And he had a mad wife. 
27. b. Hogs in the garden, catch 'em Towfer. 

30. 59. C. You owe me five (hillings, fay the bells of St. Helen's. 
60. a. Continued [ii verfes]. 
65. b. When I was a little he. 

61. 61. C. a. What's the news of the day.? 

5. b. " To market, to market, to buy a penny bun, 

Home again, home again, market is done." 
14. 62. a. There were two blind men went to fee. 

38. b. The little black dog ran 'round the houfe. 

c. " [Wardrobe of the renowned Thomas Thumb, Efq., of 
Thumb hall, Thumbfliire.]" 
An oaken leaf he had for his crown, etc. 
" Tom, Tom, of Iflington, 
Married a wife on Sunday." 
a. One, two, buckle my fhoe. 

Diddle, diddle, dumpling, my fon John. 
Puffy fits behind the log. 
a. There was an old woman toft up in a blanket. 
Jacky, come give me thy fiddle. 
Smiling girls, rofy boys. 
Continued. [Modern.] 
Away pretty Robin. [Modern.] 
Continued. 

Fa, fe,'fi, fo, fum, I fmell the blood of an Engliftiman. 
Pretty bee, do not buzz about over the flower. [Modern.] 
Coniinued. 



84. 


63- 






8. 


64. 




a. 


26. 






b. 


44. 


65. 


C. 




22. 


66. 




a. 


76. 






b. 


33- 


67. 
68. 


C. 




78. 


69. 


c. 






70. 




a. 


14. 






b. 




71- 


c. 






72. 




a. 



22 Preface. 



1833 1824 Contents, etc. — Contents. 

edition, edition. ' 

Pag8. fage. 



55 

46 

39 

47 
70 



87 
8( 

31 

88 
68 
66 

74 



b. The cuckoo's a bonny bird. 
73. C. <7. Bow, wow, wow. [N. p. 58.] 



b. Drunken Tom, with jacket blue. 
74. a. Saturday night fhall be my whole care. 

* b. 1 won't be my father's Jack. [N. p. 20.] 

c. " Hey, ding a ding, I heard a bird fing, 
The parliament foldiers are gone to the King." 

*75. C. What care I how black I be. [N. p. 44.] 
*76. a. We're three brethren out of Spain. [N. p. 64.] 

b. Once in my life I married a wife. 
77. C. When the fnow is on the ground. [Modern.] 
""■78. a. Here's A. B. C. [N. p. 70; altered in 1833.] 

* b. There was an old man, And he had a calf. [N. p. 22. J 
*79. C. Is Mafter Smith within.? [N. p. 31,] 
*8o. a. A logical fong, or, the conjurer's reafon for not getting 

money. [N. p. 68.] 

b. An Indian giant's fifliing tackle. 

47. 81. C. Bonny lafs, bonny lafs, will you be mine ? 

81. 62. a. Mary, Mary, quite contrary. 

20. b. I'll tell you a ftory. About Mother Morey. 

c. Thirty days hath September. 

84. *83. C. a. One, two, three, four, five. [N. p. 46.] 
88. b. Milkman, milkman, where have you been. 

a. When the twifter a twifting will twift him a twine. 

b. Cock a doodle doo. My dame has loft her fhoe. [N. 

P- 34-] 
C. As I was going to fell my eggs. 
Cut '^B." 

a. I had a little hobby-horfe, And it was dapple-gray. 

b. Go to bed, Tom. 

c. There were two black birds fitting on a hill. [N. p. 65.] 
C. a. Little Robin Redbreaft fat upon a tree. 

b. Blefs you, blefs you, Burny bee, 

Say, when will your wedding be ? [4 lines.] 

a. TafFy was a Welchman. 

b. One mifty, moifty morning. 

c. Shake a leg, wag a leg, when will you gang } 



84. 


84. 

* 


42. 


85. 
86. 




87. 


95- 

91. 

6. 


* 
88. 


56. 


89. 


21. 




53- 





Preface. 



23 



1833 1824 Contents, etc. — Continued. 

edition, edition. ' 

Page. Page. 

6. 90. C. a. The man in the wildernefs afked me. 

80. b. See-faw, Jack-a-daw. 
71. 91. C. Pibroch of Donnell Dhu. 

92. Continued. 

93. a. do. 

42. b. Old Miftrcfs M'Shuttle. 

80. c. Rock-a-by, baby, thy cradle is green. 

89. *94. C. a. There was an old woman, 

She fold puddings and pies. [N. p. 62.] 

66. b. Charley loves good cake and ale. 

92. 95. C. Willy boy, Willy boy, where are you going .? 

75. *96. C. a. Hickory, dickory, dock. [N. p. 73.] 

II. b. When I was a little boy, I waftied my mammy's difhes. 

87. *97. C. See, faw, Margery Daw. [N. p. 27.] 

*98. a. When I was a little boy, I had but little wit. [N. p. 50.] 

85. b. As I was going to St. Ives. 
20. 99. C. Sweep, fweep, chimney fweep. 

67. 103. C. a. Peter, Peter, pumpkin eater. 

86. * b. Crofs patch draw the latch. 
69. 101. C. Goofey, goofey, gander. 

58. 102. C a. Ride a cock-horfe to Banbury crofs. 

To buy little Johnny a galloping horse. 
b, " One-erzol, zu-erzol, zig-erzol zan, 
Bob-tail, vinegar, little tall Tan, 
Harum, fcarum. Virgin Marum, blindfold." 
82. 103. C. When I was a little boy my mother kept me in, 

16. 103. We will go to the wood, fays Richard to Robin. 

104. Continued. 

[The pagination wrong in this form.] 
48. 106. London Bridge is broken down. 

107. do. 

108. a. do. 

34. b. Hey, ding-a-ding, what fhall I fing .? 

78. 109. C. a. Handy-fpandy, Jacky Dandy. 

65. b. I had a little doll, the prettieft ever feen. 

no. a. Fee, fau, foe, fum. [See p. 70.] 

68. * b. Jack and Jill went up the hill. [N. p. 37.] 



24 



1833 1824 

edition, edition, 

Page. Page. 


20. 




63. 


III. C 




*II2. 




»i3- 




114. 


8. 


115. c 


64. 


* 



Preface. 

Contents, etc. — Continued. 



c. Nofe, nofe, jolly red nofe. 

Up in a green orchard there is a green tree. 
There was a little man, and he wooed a little maid, 
do. 
do. (Altered.) [N. p. 11.] 

a. Snail, fnail, come out of your hole. 

b. " See, faw, facradown, facradown. 
Which is the way to Bofton town ? 

One foot up the other foot down, 
That is the way to Bolton town. 
Bofton town's chang'd into a city, 
But I've no time to change my ditty." [N. p. 29.] 
52. 116. a. Little lad, little lad, where waft thou born ? 

89. b. A cow and a calf. 

61. * c. There was an old man in a velvet coat. [N. p. 35.] 

40. 117. a. Dear fenfibility, O la ! 

36. b. Daffy down dilly is new come to town. 

67. 118. a. John O'Gudgeon was a wild man. 

91. h. Little Jack Nory, told me a ftory. 

118, c. One-ery, you-ery, ekery, haven. 

Hollow-bone, tollow bone, ten or eleven. 

Spin, fpun, muft be done, 

Hollow-bone, toUow-bone, twenty-one." 

Jemima Goose. 



In 1833 i^unroe & Francis iffued a new edition, for which they fecured 
copyright. As will be feen by the table of contents juft given, nearly all 
the rhymes of the firft iffue were retained in this, but the order was entirely 
altered. The additions are very few and trifling, except the following 
three : 

" 'Twas once upon a time, when Jenny Wren was young." 
*' As I was going to Derby, upon a market day." 
"When good King Arthur ruled the land." 



Preface. 



25 



The title is as follows, the covers bearing a cut of a woman with agoofe's 
head, etc. : 



MOTHER GOOSE'S 

MELODIES. 

The only Pufe Edition. 

ALL THAT HAVE EVE ft COME TO LIGHT OP ,HEE 
MBMORABX.E WRITINGS, 

TftOrrHEK 

WITH THOSE WHICH HAVB BEiJ* DISCOVERED AMONG THB'MSS. OF 

HERCULANEUM: 

LIKtWIJB 

B7KRT ONB RCCEITTLV FOnMD IN THE SAME STONB BOX 

WHICH BOLD TBB OOLOEM PLATES OF THE BOOR OF MOEKOS. 



THE WHOLE 

COMPARED, REVISED, AND SANCTIONED, 
BT one or 

THE ANNOTATORS OF THE GOOSE FAMILY. 



WITH MANT NEW ENaHAVINOS. 

Entered, tecorHini; to Act of Congress, in the year 1833, by Mcimoi Sc Prarcu, j 
(a the C)erb'« office, of the Dtstoct Coart of MaafacbuMtta. j 



jlrtn^nrkjnlilSnatnti: 

C. S. FRANCIS AND COMPANY. 



Ninety-fix pages, beginning on p. 3. Page i is title, p. 2 is an addrefs 



26 



Preface. 



to the readers. The pages are 3!^ in. wide by 4.^ in. high, and have a ruled 
border. The laft page is here given m fac-fimile : 

GOOSE'S QUARTO 

WITH SEVENTY ENGRAVINGS. 



96 



ADVERTISEMENT. 



My young friends, when yon have read the Verses 

in this Booi[, I recommend that you 

purchase my new volume of 

raiHEI, MYiES h JIIILES, 

WmOH CONTAHTS THE BZMAtinnft OV 

BESIDES SOME NEW STORIES, SUCH AS FOLLOW :— 

* THE KID THAT WOITLDN'T GO.* 

* HITTERY TITTERY, WHO WENT UP CHIMNEY.* 

* THE DEATH OP LITTLE JENNY WREN, AND WHAT THE 
DOCTORS SAID ABOUT HER.' 

* THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT/ 

&C. &C. &C. 

Illustrated with new and beautiful Pictures, 



Although I have not feen this book, I prefume that it was printed, and 
may yet be found. 

In i860 a new copyright was obtained by James Miller, 647 Broadway, 
New York, fuccefTor to C. I. Francis ^ Co., but the changes are not very 
great from the Bofton edition. 

I believe that this particular edition is no longer in print, and the rival 



Preface. 



27 



ifTues of McLoughlin Bros., of New York, and others, feem to hold the 
market. 

A friend in Bofton, poflefles a copy, given him in 1843, °^ ^ different 
colledlion. It is entitled, " Mother Goofe's Quarto, or, Nurfery Melodies, 
embelliflied with two hundred engravings. New York : Publiftied by 
Edward Dunigan, 151 Fulton Street." No date, 94 pages, not numbered. 

Among curiofities I would clafs an edition copyrighted in 1848, by 
George S. Appleton, of Philadelphia, ftyled " Mother Goofe in Hieroglyph- 
ics;" and one iffued by George Routledge & Sons, New York, illuftrated by 
Kate Greenway, *'as originally engraved and printed by Edmund Evans." 
What this laft phrafe means I do not know. 

Englifli publifhers, alfo, now fend forth enormous editions, and this little 
book feems to promife to reach wherever babies are taught the Englifh lan- 
guage. 



As to the merits of Newbery's collection, little need be faid. Moft of 
the rhymes thus brought together are ftill in vogue; two or three are coarfe 
or trivial, and are unworthy of continuance. In Ritfon I find many added 
which are now favorites, and Halliwell has a few. It has been abundantly 
pointed out, efpecially by Halliwell, that fome of thefe rhymes were in ufe 
in Shakefpeare's time and even earlier. 

"The Queen of Hearts, fhe made fome tarts," four long ftanzas, is 
quoted in Notes and ^eries^ 3d S., viii, 133, from the European Magazine^ 
1782, vol. i, p. 252. Again in Notes and ^eries, 5th S., v, 366, Dr. Rim- 
bault writes : 

"In a fong entitled *The London Medley,' printed in The Aviary^ 1744? 
the following are quoted: 

' Colly, my cow.' 

'Tom Farthing.' 

' Old Obadiah fings Ave Maria.' 

'Sing, lullaby, baby, on the tree top.' 

'An old woman and her cat fat by the fire.' 

' There was an old woman fold puddings and pies.' " 

In "The Faftiionable Lady, or, Harlequin's Opera," 1730, mention is 
made of "London bridge is broken down;" and in "The Grub Street 
Opera," 1731, the finale is dire£led to be fung to the tune of "Little Jack 
Horner." 



28 Preface. 



In Notes and ^eries, 4th S., vii, 386, it is ftated that in Grajion's Chroni- 
cle^ dated 1570, is the following: 



" Thirty days hath November, 
April, June and September, 
February hath twenty-eight alone 
And all the rest have thirty-one." 

In Winder's Almanac for 1636, printed at Cambridge, is this verfion: 

" April, June and September 
Thirty days have, as November ; 
Each month else doth never vary 
From thirty-one save February, 
Which twenty-eight doth still confine 
Save on leap-year, then twenty-nine." 

This rhyme, although not to be found in Mother Goofe, is fo univerfally 
taught to children, that I hope its introdu£tIon here is excufable. 

As to what fliould conftitute a ftandard edition of Mother Goofe, I ven- 
ture to make a clofing suggeftion. 

Corruptions of the text have crept into many of the late editions, and mod- 
ern imitations have been foifted in too often. It is to be hoped that hereafter 
thefe objectionable features will difappear, and that future generations of 
babies will be carefully foothed only by fuch verfes as have been duly ap- 
proved by their predeceflbrs, and handed down, not fimply by oral tranfmis- 
fion, but by the fafeguard of an immaculate text. 

As a contribution to this end, I would fuggeft that the ftandard text 
fhould confift of Newbery's book (omitting the rhymes on pp. 11-14, 15, 
16, 62 and 68), and fuch additions from Ritfon and Halliwell as bear internal 
evidence of antiquity, and are true ''Nurfery Rhymes." Many of thofe 
which are wanting in Newbery's firft colieition, have fince been added, and 
have become fo endeared to later generations, that their omiflion would be 
unjuftifiable. But for the nurfery ufe, a wife difcrimination fhould be ftiown, 
and many rhymes rejected which are old, indeed, but unfuitable. 

That fuch a text may be prepared, and that this attempt to trace the lite- 
rary hiftory of a moft remarkable volume, may be of fervice therefor, is the 
fincere wifh of the present editor. 

W. H. W. 

Boston, Sept. 6th, 1890. 



PREFACE. 

By a very Great Writer of 
very Littie Books. 
'UCH might be faid in favour of 
this colleclion, but as we have 
no room for critical difquifitions we 
(hall only obferve to our readers, 
that the cuftom of fingingtheferongs 
and lullabies to children is of great 
antiquity : It is even as old as the 
time of the ancient Druids. Cliarac 
tatus, King of the Britons, was rocK.- 
ed in his Cradle in the lile of Mona, 
now called /inglefea^ and tuned to 
fleep by Tome of ihefe foporiferous 
fonnets. As the beft things howev. 
er, may be made an ill uic of, fo ibis 
kind of compofitions has been em- 
ployed in a fatirical manner of 
which we havea rcmaxkablc instance 
fo ftr back as the reign of king Hen- 
ry Jhe fifth. When that great monarch 



i* R £ F A C ^. 

_ tr 







■■^3z 




PREFACE. vil 

turned his arms agaiiift. JViinrr, he 
compofed the preceding march to 
lead his troops to Battle, well know- 
ing that mufick had often the power 
of Infpiring courage, efpecially in 
theminds of good men. Of this his 
cndmiestook advantage, and. as our 
happy nation, even at that time, was 
never without a faftion, fame of the 
malcontents adopted the following 
words to the king's own march, in 
order to ridicule his majefty, and to 
fheW the folly and impoflibility of 
his undertaking. 
There waj an oil woman tofs''d in a blanket. 

Seventeen times as high as ;he nsoon j 
But where fhe ^as £oirg nc mortal could tell. 

For under l-erarrri ihe firtiec a hroom. 
Old wonvao, old wdrnan, old womai;, feidl 
Whtiher, ah whither, «h whither fo' hii;!) ? 

To rWeep the cc)"6wel>s froih the /ky. 

And rUiwivitli/dttby and by. 

Kcre 



viii PREFACE. 

Here the king is reprefented as an, 
old woman, engaged in a purfuit the 
moft abfurd and extravagant imagin- 
able ; but when he had routed the 
whole French army at the battle of 
Jlgincourt^ taking their king ahd the 
ilower of their nobility prifoncrs, 
and with ten thoufand men only 
jTjadc himfclf mafter of their king- 
dom ; the very men who had ridi- 
culed him before, began to think 
nothing was too arduous for him to 
furmount, they therefore cancelled 
the former fonnct, which they were 
now afhamed of, and fubftitutedthis 
jn its ftead, which you will pleafe 
to obferve goes to the fume tunc. 
So vaftis the pr iweft of Harry the Grear« 

He'll pluck a-Ha-rfrom the pale fac'<l mooa i 
Or a Ion familiarly.take-iy^he tooth, 

And lead him abaat4l^p,i4^]ca4 ^ha^oon. 

All, 



i^ 



PREFACE. 



JX 



All Princes and potentates under the fun, 
Through fear into corners and holes away run 
While no dangers nor dread his fwift progrefs 

retards, 
For he deals about kingdoms as w£ do our cards. 

When this was fhewn to his maj- 
cfty he fmilingly fafd that folly al- 
ways deall in extravagancies, and 
that knaves fometimes put on the 
garb of fools to promote in that dif- 
guife their own wicked defigns, 
** The flattery in the laft (fays he) is 
more infulting than the impudence 
of the firft, and to weak minds might 
do more mifchief ; but wc have the 
old proverb in our izvo\xr—If we do 
notjlatter ourf elves ^ thtjlatUry of oth' 
ers will never hurt us.!' 

We cannot conclude without ob- 
ferving, the great probability there 
is that the cuftom of making Non- 
fen/e Verjcs in our fchools was bor- 



or PREFACE. 

rowed from this praftice among the 
old Brilijh nurfes ; they have, in- 
deed, been always the firft precep- 
tors of the youth of this kingdom, 
and from them the rudiments of taftc 
and learning are naturally derived. 
Let none therefore fpeak irreverent- 
ly of this ancient maternity, as they 
maybeconfideredas the great grand- 
mothers of fcicnce and knowledge. 




Mother GOO^E's^ Melody 




^LOVE SONG 

THERE was a little man, 
Who wooed a little maid ; 
And he faid, little Maid^ will you 

' wed, wed, wed ? 
I have little more to fay. 
So "Will you aye or nay, 
- sr the lead faid is fooneft men-dcd^ 
ded, ded» 

II. Then 



12 Mother GOOSE'S Melody, 

ir. 

Then replied the little Maid, 

Little Sir, you've Httle faid 

To induce a little Maid for to wed, 

wed, wed ; 
You muft fay a little more, 
Arid produce a little Ore, 
E'er I make a little Prhit in your 

Bed. Bed, Bed. 

in. 

Thpti the little Man reply'd, 
If you'll be my little Bride, 
I'll raife my Love Notes a little 

higher, higher, higher ; 
Tho' my offers are not meet, 
Yet jny little Heart is great. 
With the little God of Love all on 

Fire, Fire, Fire. 

IV. 

Then the little Maid reply'd, 
Should I be your little Bride, 



—5 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 13 

Pray wliat muft we have for to eal, 

cat, cat ? A . , • 

Wifi the Flame that you're fo rich m 
Light a F>rc in the Kitchen, 
Or the little God of Love turtv the 
Sjpit; Spit, Spit ? 

V. 

Then the little man he fighM, 

And, fome fay, a little cry'd, 

For his little Heart was big wuk 

Sorrow, Sorrow, Sorrow j 
As I am your little Slave, 
If the little that I have 
Be too little, little, we will borrow, 

borrow, borrow. 

He who borrows is anothcir Man's 
Slave, and pawns his Honour, his Liber- 
ty, and fometimes his Nofe for the pay- 
ment. Learo to Uvc on a little, and be 
independent. P«tck on Prudence. 

VI. Then 



14 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 

VI. 

Then the little Man fo gent, 
Made the Utile Maid relent, 
An<lfct.hcrlictielleartathink-k.jng 

king, Uing* 
Tho' his Offers were bu^ fmall, 
She took his little All, 
She could have but the Cat and her 

Skin, Skin, Skin. 




Motlier GOOSE'S Melody. 15 







A DIRGE. 

LITTLE Betty WinckU Ihelvad a 
Pig, 
It v.-as a little Pig itot Vtry big ? 
When he was alive "he liv'd in Clo- 
ver, 
But now he's dead, and that's all 
Johnny Winchk, he [over ; 

Sale down and cry'd, 
B''tly IVinckU fhc 

Laid down anddy'd ; 
So there was an End of one, two, 
and three, 

Johnny 



i6 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 

JoKnny WinckU He, 
Betty W'znc.l&She, 
And Piggy Wiggle. 

A Dirge is a Song tnide for the Bead ; 
but whether this was made for Bttty Winckle 
or her Pig, is uncertain ; no Notice being 
take^ of it by Camidtn^ or any of the fatnous 
Antiquarians. |4 ) 

JTa'/'f Syftemo£S<jnfe. 



^^ 



Mother GOOSE's Melody, r^ 




A melancholy SONG. 

TRIP upon Trenchers, 
And dance upon Diflves, 
My mother fcnt me for lome Bawn, 

fome Bawn : 
She bid mc tread lightly, 
And cojme again q^uickly. 
For fear the young Men fhould do 

me fome Harm. 
Yet did'nt you fee. 
Yet did'nt you fee, [^on me 

What naughty tricks they put up 

i» Xhcy 



1 8 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 

They broke my Pitcher, 

>\nd fpilt the Water, 

And huffed my Mother, 

Aud chid herX)aughter, 

And kifs'd my^Slfter inflead of mc* 

What a SucccfTion of misfortunes befcl tlii? 
poor Girl ! But the laft Cjrcumlhnce was the 
Mod affefting, and mfght have'provcd fatal. 
fViri/lou's View of Bath. 



t t ft t 



Mother GOOSE-'s Melody. 19 




CROSS Patch draw the Latch, 
Set by the Fire and ipin ; 
TaTce a cup and drink it tip, 
Then call your Neighbours in, 

A common Cafe this, to call in onr Nei;;h- 
bours to rejoice when all the good Liquor :s 
gpnc. i'tinj. 



Amp.hiqm's 



20- Mother GOOSE's Melody. 




Aiivuickii's SONG of EvT.y Vict, 

IWONllberoy Father's Jack, 
I. wd^*lbe mv Father's Gill', 
X will be tKe Fiddler's Wife, 
And have Mufick when 1 will. 
T'ath^i tit't Je tunc, 
T*otTter little Tune, 
Prithee, Love, play me 
T'other little Tune. 

Ma«w.* There arts re th? mod valuable 
fwhieh are of thcgrea.cil ufe. ^^j. „„ 



—6 



/ /) 



Mother COOSE^s Melody, at 

?3 




^HREEwife Men of Gotham 
^ They went to Sea in a Bowl» 
Ami if the Bowl had been fttonger 
My Song had been lotigeir. 

It is long enough. N^ever laSMOt tie toCa 
of what it not wo»h h&ving. Sejlt'- 



THERE 



32 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 




TBlSRE was an old Man, 
And he had a Calf, 
And that's Half ; 
He fook h'lBi out of the Stall, 
And put him on the Wall, 
4ind that's all. 

Maxim, Thofe who are given to tell alt 
th«y know generally tell more thabi they 
know 



THERE 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 23 




THhRE Wub ati 01.. vv ouian 
Liv'd under a Hill, 
She put a fnoufe in a Ba^ 
And fent it to Mill : 
The Miller did fwcar 
By the point of his Knife, 
He never took Toll 
Of a Moufe in his Life. 

The only Inftance of 3" MflleY teTufing Toll, 
snd for which the Cat has jvft CaufV of Com- 
plaint r^aitvft bim; Ceh \ipoTiXi(tle'oti. 



24 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 




THERE was an old Woman 
Liv'd under a HilU 
And if Ihe isn't gone 
She lives there ftill. 

This is a Tclf evident Propofition, which ?i 
the very EHence of Truth She lived tinier 
the Hill, and if/he is ret gortejhr itvei there fiill. 
Nobody will ti'refutne to conuadift this. 

' Crauja. 

PLATO'S 



^ } 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 25 




PLATO'S SONG. 

DING dong Bell, 
The Cat is in the Well. 
Who put her in ? 
Little Johnny Green. 
What a naughty Boy was that. 
To drojvn Poor Puffy Cat, 
Who never did any Harm, 
And kill'd the Mice ia his Father's 
Barn, 

Maxim. iTe thfft injures one t^reatn 
ens an Hundred, 

LITTLE. 



s6 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 




LITTLE Tom Txuker 
Sings for his Supper j 
What (Hall he eat ? 
White Bread and Butter : 
How will he cut it, 
Without e're a Knife ? 
How will he be marriedj 
Without e^er a Wife ? 

To be married without a wife i? a terrible 
Thing, and to be married with a bad Wife is 

fcmctlniig^wotfes .Howeyer, % gopd WUe that 
fings well iitke 'ieit aufical lajftjiumfnt «p th« 



Mother GOOSE's Melody. ^^ 




SE faw, Margery Daw, 
Jacky fhall have a new Mailer ; 
jfacky muft have but a Penny a Day, 
Becaufe he can work no fafter. 

It !6a me&n and fcandalous Practice in Au- 
thors to put Notes to Things that defervc no 
^]ouce. 

Grotius, 



CHEAT 



28 Mother GOOSE'S Melody* 




GREAT Ar little, a, 
Bbuncing B ; 
The Cat's in the Cupboard, 
And (he can't fee. 

. Ye» (he can fee that yott arc qaugHtXr ^^^ 
4Q%'t mind yourJBook. "" 



S£ 



Mother GOOSE'S Mclodjr. 29 




SE faw, facaradowti. 
Which is the Wzy to .Bojlori 
I'own ? 
One Foot up the other Foot down. 
That is the Way to Bqfiori TbWn. 

Or to any other Town upon the Face of the 
£aith* 



SHOE 



Mother GOOSE'S MeIod>r. 3s 




IS J^ohn Smith within ? 
Yes, that he is. 
Can he fet a Shoe ? 
Aye, marry two. 
Here a Nail, and there a Nail, 
Tick, tack, too. 

Maxim. Krtowled^e i» ^ Trealgre, but 
Prjftice is the Key to it. 



HIGH 



30 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 




SHOE the Colt, 
Shoe the Colt, 
Shoe the wild Mare j 
Here a nail, 
There a Nail, 
Yet fhe goes bare. 

Ay, ay, drive ^he Nail when it will go : 
That's the Way of ihe World, and is ilie 
Method pUrfoed by all our Financisis^ Poli- 
ticians, and Necromancers. 

IS 



32 Mother GOOSE'S Melody, 




HIGH diddle, diddle. 
The Cat and the Fiddle, 
The Cow jump'd over the Moon ; 
The little Dog laugh'd 
To fee fuch Craft, 

And the Difh ran away with the 
Spoon. 

It xnuft be a little Dog that laugh'd, for a 
great Dog would be afhwncd to laugh at fuch 
Nonfenfe, 

RIDE 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 33 







IDE a Cock Horfe 
To Banbury Crofs, 
To fee what Tommy can buy ; 
A Penny white Loaf, 
A penny white Cake, 

And a Two penny Apple Pye. 

There's a good Boy, eat up your Pye and 
hold your Tongue ; for Silence is ihe Ggn o£ 
Wjfdora, 



COCK 



34 Mother GOOSE'« Melody. 




COCK a doodle doo» 
My Dame has loft her Shoe ; 
My Maaefs loft his Fiddle Stick, 
And knovs not what to do. 

The Cock crows us up early in the Morn- 
ing, ih-t we fray work for Our Bread, and not 
live upf'n Cbau>y or upon Troft } /*' ^* ivho 
lives iifon Charity f^aU bt often affronted^ end 
6a that Hvtt H/en Tryjijhallfaj double^. 

THERE 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 35 




THERE was an old Man 
In a Velvet Coat^ 
He kifs'd a Maid 
And gave her a Groat ; 
The Groat it was crackt, 
And would not go, 
Ah, old Man, d'you ferve me fo? 

Maxim, 

If the Coat be ever fo fine that a Fool 
wears, it is Hill but a fool's Coat. 

ROUND 



36 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 





L^l 


^^^P 


X' — '' 


z^ 




_-,_:,^ 31 


Bkiiii 


iiiiiiilillll 



OUND about, round about, 
Magotty Pye ; 
My Father loves good Ale, 
And fodo I. 

Maxim, 

Evil Company makes the Good bad aad 
cbe Bad worfc. 



JACK 



Mother GOOSE's Melody. 37 




'TACK and Gill 
J Went up the Hill, 

To fetch a Pail of Water ; 
Jack fell down 
And broke his Crown, 

And Gill came tumbling after, 

Maxim* 

The more you think of dyings the bettc< 
you will live, 

Aristotle's 



38 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 




Aristotle's STORY. 

THERE were two JSirds fat on 
& Stone, 

Fa, la, la, la, lal, de ; [one. 
One flew away, and then there was 

Fa, la, la, la, lal, de ; 
The other flew after, 
And then there was none. 
Fa, la, la, la, lal, de ; 
And fo the poor Stone 
Was loft all alone. 

Fa, la, la, la, lal, de. 
VcisTRSfi^rve i\ ^ Chapter of Coafrquence 
Jn tlte next new Book of Logick. 



Mother GOOSE's Melody. 39 




HUSH a by Baby 
On the Tree Top, 
When the Wind blows 
The Cradle will rock 
When the Bough breaks 

The Cradle will fall, 
Down tumbles baby, 
Cradle and all. 

This may ferve ax a Warning to tfic Proud 
«nd Ambitious, who climb fo high that the/ 
generally fall at laft. 

Cootect turns all it touches into Gold. 

LITTLE 



40 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 




LITTLE Jack Horner 
Sat in a Corner, 
Eating of Chrijimas Pye ; 
He put in his Thumb, 
And puird out a PJumb, 

And what a good Boy was I, 

yack was a Bov of excellent Taftc, as fhould 
appear by his pulling out a Plumb ; it is there- 
fore fiippolcd that his Father apprenticed him 
to a Mince Pye maker, that he might improve 
his Taftc from Year to Year ; no one flahding 
in fo much Need of good Tafle as a Pailry 
Couk, 

Ben ley on the Sublime and Beautiful. 
PEASE' 



Mother .GOOSE'S Melody. 41 




PEASE Porridge jiot, 
Peafe Porridge cold, 
Peafe Porridge in the Pot 

Nine Days old. 
Spell me that in four Letters ? 
1 will. That. 

Maxim. 

The poor are feWomer Cck for Want of 
Food, than the Rich are by the £xcefs of it. 

WHO 



42 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 




'IIO comes here ? 
A Grenadier. 
What dc you want ? 

A Pot of Beer. 
Where is your Money ? 
I've forgot. 
Get you gone 
You drunken Sot. 

Maxim, 

Intemperance is attended with Difcafcs, 
and Idlcnel's with Poverty. 

JACK 



Mother GOOSE's Melody. 43 




JACK Sprat 
J Could eat no Fat, 
His Wife could eat no Lean j 
And fo, betwixt them both. 
They lick'd the Platter clean. 



Ma 



xim. 



Better go to Bed fuppcrlefs, than rife m 
Debt. 



WHAT 



44 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 




'HAT Care I how black I be, 
Twenty Pounds will mar- 
ry me ; 
If Twenty won't, Forty Ihall, 
X am my Mother's bouncing Girl. 

Maxim, 

If we do not flatter ourfelves, the Flattery 
of others would have aoefTefl* 



TELL 



—7 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody, 45 




'T^ELL Tale Tit, 
-*• Your Tongue fliall be flit. 
And all the Dogs in our Towa 
Shall have a Bit. 

Maxim. 

Point not at the Faults of others with a foul 
Finger. 



ONE. 



4.6 Mother GOOSE'S Melody, 




ONE, tv/o, three. 
Four and Pive, 
I caught a Hate alive ; 
Six, feven, ei]ght. 
Nine and ten, 
I let him go again. 

Maxim, 

We may be as good as we pteale, if we 
pleafe to be good. 



Mother GOOSE'S Melod^r. 47 




A DOLEFUL DITTY. 
I. 

q-»HREE Children Aiding on the 
I- Upon a Summer's Day, £Ice 
As it fell out they all fell in, 
The reft they ran away. 

Oh ! had thefe Children been at 
School, 
Or Aiding on dry Ground, 
Ten Thoufand Pounds to one Pcn- 

They had not then been drown'dL 

IIL 



48 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 

in. 

Ye Parents who have children dear, 
And eke ye that have none. 

If you would keep them fafe abroad 
Pray keep them all at home. 

There is fomething fo melancholy in this 
Song, that it has occafioned many People to 
make Water. It is almoft as diuretick as the 
Tune which John the Coachman whiftles to 
bis Horfcs. 

TTumpington'i Travel*. 



FATTY 



¥ 



Mother GOOSE'S melody. 49 




PATTY Cake, Patty Cake, 
Baker's Man ; 
That I will Mailer, 
As fafl as I can ; 
Prick it and prick it. 
And mark it with a T, 
And there will be enough 
For Jfackty and me. 

MaxtiHf 
The fureft Way to gain oui Ends is to mod- 
crate our t)crircs. ..,,,^», 

D WHEN 



50 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 




WHEN I was a little Bov 
1 had but liulc Wit', 
»Tis a long Time ago. 

And I have no more yet j 
Nor ever, ever fball. 

Until that I die, 
For the longer I live, 
The more Fool am I. 

Maxim. 

He t^jtwjll be his own M^r»ha» oJtcna 
tooUoih^s Scholar. ^^^^ 



^fother GOOSE'S Melody; si 




WHEN I was a little Boy 
I liv'd bv myfelf, 
And all the Bread 
And Cheefe I got 

I laid upon the Shelf ; 
The Rats and the Mice 

They made fuch a Strife, 
That I was forc'd to go to Town 
And buy me a Wife. 

ir. 

The Streets were fo broad, 
The Lanes were fo narrow, 

I was 



5a Mother GOOSE'S Meloay. 

r was forc'd to bring my Wife home 

In a Wheelbarrow ; 
The Wheelbarrow broke ; 

And my Wife had a Fall. 
Farcwel 

Wheelbarrow, Wife and all. 

Frovide agaioil the woift, and hope for the 
heft. 



snr 



—8 



^\ 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 55 




MY Kitten a Kitten, 
And oh ! my Kitten, my Dea- 
Such a fweet Pap as this fry, 

There is not far nor neary ; 
There we go up, up, Up, 
Here we go down, down, down, 
Here we go backwards and forwards. 
And here we go round, round^ 
round. 

MaxiMt>\ 

, Idlencfft hath no Advocate, but maay 
Frieods. 

THIS 



54 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 




npHIS Pfg went to Market, 
^ That Pig (laid at Home ; 
This Pig had roaft Meat, 
That Pig had none y 
This Pig went to the Barn door. 
And cry'd Week, Week, for more* 

Maxim. 

If we do not govern our Paflions our Paf- 
ftont will govern us^ 

ALEX. 



Mother GOOSE's Melody. 5S 







ALEXANDER'S SONG. 
'T'HERE was a Man of Thejfaiy^ 
'*' And he was wond'rous wife. 
He jump'd into a Quick fct Hedge, 

And fcratch'd out both his Eyest 
And when he faw his Eyes were out^ 

With all his Might and Main, 
He jump'd into another Hedge, 

And fcratch'd them in again* 



HOW 



56 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 

How happy it was for the Man to fcratcli 
his Eyes in again, when they were fcratch'd 
out ! But he wai a Blockhead, or he would have 
kept himfelf out of the Hedge, and not been 
i'cratch'd at all. 

lyifcvran's new Way to Wifdom. 



4t * 

* « * 

• • * * 



ALONG 



i^-y 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 57 




ALONG tail'd Pig, or a fliort 
tail'd Pig, 
Or a Pig without any Tail i 
A Sow Pig, or a Boar Pig, 
Or a Pig with a curling Tail. 
Take hold of the Tail and cat off 

his Head ; 
And then you'll be fure the Pig ho^ 
is dead. 



CJESAR.'f 



58 MotheT GOOSE'S Melody, 




CiESAR's SONG. 

BOW, wow, wow, 
Whofe Dog art thou ? 
Little Tflwi Tinker's Dog, 
Bow, wow, wow. 

Tom TinktT*i Dog is a very good Dog, and 
iaa hoaeilec £).eg tfaab his^aftetk 



BAH, 



MbtTiclr GOOSE'S McTodjr. 59 




60 Mother GOOSE's Melody, 




BAH, bah, black Slieep, 
Have you any Wool ? 
Yes, marry have I, 
Three Bags full ; 
One for my mailer, 

One for my Dame, 
But none for the little Boy 
Who criei in the Lane. 

Maxim, 

Bad Habita axeea^er conquered Toclay than 
TomoRow* 

RORW 



•DO BIN and Richard 

Were two pretty Men, 
They lay in Bed 

'Till the Clock ftruck Ten 
Then up ftarts Robin 

And looks at the Iky, 
Oh 1 Brother Richard, 

The Sun's very high ; 
You go before 

With the Bottle and Bag, 
And I will come after 

On little 7acA Nag, 

What 



4^ 



Mother GOOSE's Melody. 6t 

What lazy Rogues were thcfe to lie in Bed 
fo long, I dare fay they have bo Clothes to 
their Backs ; for Lamneft cUtbe: a Man with 
Ragt. 



• « « 



««• 



THERE 



6Z MotHer GOOSE'S Mdody*. 




THERE was' ail old Woman, 
And fhe fold Puddings and 
She went to the Mill [Pies, 

And the Duft flew into her Eyes : 
Hot Pics 

And cold Pies to fell^ 
Wherever fhe goes 

You may follow her by the Smell. 

Maxim^ 

tithcT fay riothing of the Abfent, or fpeak 
)ikeft Fiiend. 

THE 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. ^2 



64 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 





|i^iqffi|S|iH»iiiiii 


Jii 


1 


B 




1 










^ 


^d 



THE Sow came in with. a Saddle, 
The little Pig rock'd the Cradle, 
The Difhjump'datopof the Table, 
To fee the Pot walh the Ladle ; 
The Spit that flood behind a Bench 
Call'd the Difhclbut dirty Wench ; 
Ods plut, fays the Gridiron, 

Can't ye agree, 
I'm the Head Conflable, 

Bring 'cm to me. 

Note, If he a£ts as Cbnftable in this Care, 
tbc Cook muft furely be the Juftlce of Peace. 

WE'RE 




WE'RE three Brethren out of 
Spain 
Come to court your Daughter Jant : 
My Daughter Janeihe is too young. 
She has no fkill in a . flattering 

Tongue, 
Be fhe young, or be fhe old. 
It's for her Gold fhe miifl be fold ; 
So fare you well, my Lady gay. 
We muft return another Day. 
Maxim. Riches fervc a wife Man, and gov- 

THERE 



Mother GOOSE'S MeJo<!y. 65 




THERE M^ere two Blackhirds 
Sat upon a Hill, 
The one was nam'd Ja(-k^ 

The other nam'd Gill, 
Fly away Jack^ 

Fly away Gill^ 
Come again ^a-ck^ . 
Come again GilL 

Maxim. 

A^Wi inUte Hafldis vrdrth t\fo. m th^ 
BuQi. _ 

E BOYS 



65 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 




BOYS and Girls come out to 
play, 
The Moon does Oiine as bright as 

day ; 
Come with a Hoop, and come with 

a Call, 
Come with a good Will or not at 

all. 
Loofe your. Supper, and loofe your 

Sleep, 
Come to your Play fellows in the 

Street, 

Up 



Motlier GOOSE'S Melody. 67 

Up the Ladder and down the Wall, 
A Halfpenny Loaf will ferve las all. 
But when the Loaf is gone, what 

will you do ? 
Thofe who would eat muft work*« 

'lis true. 



M, 



axivt. 



All Work ajid no Plajr makes Jacl a duU 
Bojr^ 



A Logical 



68 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 




A Logical SONG ; or the Conju- 
ror's- Reafon for not getting 
Money. 

WOU'D, if I cou'd, 
If I coud'nt how cou'd I ? 
I coud'nt, without I cou'd, cou'd I ? 
Cou'd you, without you cou'd, cou'd 
ye ? 
Cou'd ye, cou'd ye ? 
Cou'd you, without you cou'd, cou'd 
ye? 

Notet 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 69 

Note. 
This is a new Way of handling an 
old Argvmtnt^ /aid to be invented by a 
famous Senator j but it has fomething 
in it of Gothick ConJlruSlion, 

3andeirron. 



• 
« ir « * 



^LEARNED 



70 ivfbthet' GOOSE'S "Meloay. 




/i LEARNED SONG. 

HERE'S A, B, and C, 
D, E, F, and G, 
H,l, K, L,M. N,0,P,Q, 

R, S, T, and U, 
W.X,Y, andZ, 
And here's the child's Dad, 
Who is iagacioas and difccrning, 
And know6 this is the Fount of 
Leamiog. 

Note 



Motlier GOOSE S Melod/. 71 

Note. 
This is the moji learned Ditty in the 
World ;foT indeed there is;jto Song can 
be made without the Aid of ikis, it being 
the Gamut and Ground Work of them 
all, 

Mope'^ Geography of the Mind. 



« * A 

* 
m 
« 



i<SEA 



72 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 




A SEASONABLE SONG. 

PIPING hot, fmoaking hot, 
"What I've got, 
You know not, 
Hot hot Peafe, hot» hot, hot ; 
Hot are my Pcafe, hot. 

There is more MuJiCk in this Song, on 
a. told fr off y Night, than ever the Sy- 
rens were p^JJ'-Jf^d of, who captivated 
Ulylfes ^and the Lje&.s Jlick clofcr ta 
thi Ribs. 

Hiigi^leford on Hunger 
DICK 



Mother GOOSE's Melody. 73 




DICKERY, Dickery Dock, 
The Moufe ran up the Clock ; 
The Clock ftruck one, 
The Moufe ran down, 
Dickery, Dickery Dock. 

Maxim. 

Timejlays for no Mav^ 



MOTHER GOOSE'S 

MELODY. 

PART II. 

CONTAINING THE 

LULLABIES of Shake/pear, 



76 Mot^erGOOSE's Melody. 



'HERE the Bee fucks, there 
' ., fuck I, 
In a Cowflip's Beil I lie : 
There I couch ; when Owls do cry, 
On the Bat's Back I do fly, 
After Summer, merrily. 
Merrily, merrily fhall I live no^. 
Under the Bloflbms that hang on 

.the Bough, 



YOU 



—9 



^^ 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 77 

YOU fpotted Snakes, with dou- 
ble Tongue 
Thorny Hedgehogs, be not feen ; 
Newts and Blind worms, do no 
Wrong ; 
Come not near our fairy Queen. 
Philomel, with Melody, 
Sing in your fweet Lullaby ; 
Luila, lulla, lulla, lullaby ; lulla, 

lulla, lullaby. 
Never, Harm, nor Spell, nor Charm, 
Come our lovely Lady nigh ; 
So jgood Night, -with lullaby 



takp: 



78 Mother GOOSE's Melody. 

TAKE, oh ! take thofe Lips 
away, 
That fo fwertly were forefworn ; 
And thofe Eyes, the Break of Day, 
Lights that do miflead the Morn : 
But my Kifles bring again. 
Seals of Love, but feal'd in vain. 



f+Htff+ff 



4++H+++++ 



SPRING 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody 79 
SPRING. 

WHEN Daifies pied, and Vi- 
lets blue. [white ; 

And Lady fmocks all Silver 
And Cuckow buds of yellow Hue, 
Do paint the Meadows with De- 
light : 
The Cuckow then on every Tree, 
Mocks married Men, for thus fings 

he ; 
Cuckow ! [Fear, 

Cuckow ! cuckow ! O Word of 
Unpleafing to a married Ear ! 
When Shepherds pipe on oaten 
Straws, 
And merry Larks are Plough- 
men's Clocks : 
When Turtles tread, and Rooks and 
Daws, 

And 



80 Mother GOOSE'S MeIo3y. 

An<l MaiHetis laleacll fhoh Sum- 
mer fmocks ; 
Thds Cuckow th^n' on.ievery Tree, 
WJiSclsiriatrited Men, Tor thus, fing^ 

Cuckow. i 

CxJtkdW I cuclcQW ; O "Word of Fear, 

tlji^teafiog^ to a. married Ear, 



WINTER, 



m 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 8i 

WINTER. 

'HEN Icicles hang on the 
Wall, 
And Dick the Sheoherd blows his 

Nail ; 
And Tom bears Logs into the Hall, 
And Milk comes frozen home in 
Pail: 
When Blood is nipt, and Ways be 

foul, 
Then nightly fings the flaring Owl, 
Tu-whit! to-whoo ; 
A merry Note, 

While greafy Joan doth keel tho 
Pot. 
When all around the wind doth 
blow. 
And coughing drowns the Pan 
' fon's Sow J 

F And 



8^ Mother GOOSE's Melody. 

And Birds fitbrooding in the fnow. 
And Ma>m?i'sNofe looks red and 
raw : 
When roafted Crabs hifs in the 

Bowl, 
Then nightly fings the ftaring Owl, 
Tu-whit ! To-whoo ! 
A merry Note, 

While greafy jfoan doth keel the 
Pot. 



TELL 



Mother GOOSE's Melody. 83 

nPELL mc where is Fancy bre«3^ 
*■ Or in the Hearty or in the 

Head? 
How begot, how nourifiied ? 

Reply, reply. 

It isengender'd in the Eyes, 

With gazing fed, and Fan-cy dies 

In the Cradle where it lies ; 

Let us all ring Fancy's knell. 

Ding, dong. Bell ; 

Ding, dong, Bell. 



UN- 



84 Kotner GOOSE's Melody. 

UNDER the greenwood Tree, 
Who loves to lie with me. 
And tune his merry No.e, 
Unto the fweet Bird's Throat : 
Come hither, come hither, come 
hither. 
Here fball he fee 
No Enemy, 
But Winter and rough Weather. 



WHO 



•10 



A 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 85 

'X'XTHO doth Aabition fliun, 

V V And loves to lie i' th* Sun 
Seeking the Tood he eats, 
And pleas'd with what he gets ; 
Come hither, come hither, come 
hither , 

Here fhall he fee 

No Enemy, 
But Winter and rough Weather, 
If it do come to pafs, 
That any Man turn Afs ; 
Leaving his Wealth and Eafe, 
A ftubborn Will to pleafe, 
"Due ad me, due ad me, due ad me ; 

Here fhall he fee 

Grofs Fools, 
And many fuch there be*. 

BLOW 


86 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 

"D L W, blow, thou Winter 

11 Wind, 

Thou art not fo unkind 

As Man's Ingratitude ; 
Thy Tooth is not fo keen, 
Becaufe thou art not feen, 

Altho' thy Breath be rude. 
Heigh ho ! fing, heigh ho i untothfi 

green Holly ; 
Moft Friendfhip is feigning ; mott 
loving mere folly. 

Then heigh ho, the Holly ! 

This Life is mofl jolly. 
Freeze, freeze, thou bitter fky, 
That dofl not bite fo nigh. 

As Benefits forgot : 
Tho' thou the Waters warp, 
Thy Sting is not fo fharp 

As Friend remember'd not, 
Beish hoi iing, &c. 

* MIS. 


Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 87 

f^ MISTRESS mine, where are 
V^ you running ? 
ftay you here, your true Love's 
coming, 

That can fmg both high and low. 
Trip no farther, pretty Svveeting, 
Journeys end in Lovers meeting, 

Every wife Man's Son doih know. 
What i^ Love ? 'tis not hereafter : 
Prefent Mirth hath prefent Laugh- 

ter. 
What's to come, isftill unfure : 
In Decay there lies no Plenty ; 
Then come kifs me, fweet, and 
twenty, 

Youth's a Stuff will not endure. 

WHAT 


88 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 

"fX THAT fhall he have that kill'd 
VV the Deer ? 
His leather fkin and horns to wear; 
Then fing him home : — take thou 

no Scorn 
To wear the Horn, the Horn, the 

Horn : 
It was a Crefl ere thou wafl born. 
Thy Father's Father wore it, 
And thy Father bore it. 
The Horn, the Horn, the lufty 

Horn, 
It not a Thing to laugh to fcorn. 

WHEN 



Mother GOOSE'S melody. 89 

'HEN DafFodils begin to 
'pear, 

With, heigh ! the Doxy over the 
Dale ; 
Why then comes in the fweet o'th* 
Year, 
Fore the red Blood rains in the 
winter Pail, 
The white Sheet bleaching on the 
Hedge, 
With heigh ! the fweet Birds, O 
how they fing ! 
Doth, fet my progging Tooth an 
edge: 
For a Quart of Ale is a difh for a 
King. 
The Lark, that tira lyra chants. 
With, hey ! with hey I the Thrufli 
and the Jay : 

Are 



90 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 

Are fummer Songs for tne and my 
AuntSj 
"While we lay tumbling in the 
Hay. 



JOB 



Mother GOOSE's Melody; 91 

JOG on, jog on, the foot path 
Way,, 
And merrily mend the Style a, 
A merry Heart goes all the Day, 
Your fad tires in a Mile a. 



ORPHEUS 



94 Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 

ORPHEUS with his Lute made 
Trees, 
And the -Mountain Tops that 
freeze. 
Bow themfelvcs when he did 
fing ; 
To his Mufick, Plants and Flowers 
Ever rofe, as Sun and Showers 

There had made a lafting Spring. 
Ev'ry Thing that heard him play, 
Ev*n the Bellows of the Sea, 

Hung their Heads, and then lay 
by. 
In (wect Mufick is fuch Art, 
Killing Care, and Grief of Heart, 
Tall afleep or hearing die. 



HARK. 



5\ 



Mother GOOSE'S Melody. 93 

TTARK, hark ! the Lark at 
XJ. Heav'n's Gate fmgs. 

And Pk(zbus 'gin3 arife. 
His Steeds to water at thofc Springs 

On chalic'd Flowers that lies, 
And winking May buds begin 

To ope their golden Eyes, 
With every thing that's pretty 

My Lady fweet, arife j [been j 
Arife, arife. 

THB 


94 Mother GOOSE's Melody, 

' 1 'HE poor Soul fat fingmg by a 
-*- Sycamore tree, 
Her Hand on her Bofom, her Head 

on her Knee, 
The frefh Streams ran by her, and 

murmur'd her Moans, 
Her fait Tears fell from her, and 

foften'd the Stones ; 
Sing, all a green Willow muft be 

my Garland, 
Let nobody blame him, his Scorn I 

approve, 
I call'd my Love, falfe Love ; but 

what faid he then ? 
If I court more Woitlen you'll think 

of more Men, 

;f J N I s. 


B K S/or the InJhuSllon and Amufe- 
ment oJCbiUren, 'which luill make them 
nuije and happy y printed and feld by I , 
Thomas, in Worcefter, Majj'achujetts^ 
near the Court Hoiife. 

'■I "HE BROTHER'S GIFT ; or the 
JL naughty Girl reformed, Publifli- 
ed for the Advantage of the rifing Ge- 
neration. 

The SISTER'S GIFT ; or the naughty 
Boy reformed. 

The FATHER'S GIFT ; or the Way to 
be wife and happy. 

The MOTHER'S GIFT ; or a Prefent 
for all little Chiidj"en who wifh to be 
good. 

Mother GOOSE's MELODY ; or Son- 
nets for the Cradle. In two Parts, 
Part ill, contains the moft celebrated 
Songs and Lullabies of the old Britifii 
Nnrles, calculated to amufe Children 
and to excite them to Sleep. Part 2d, 
thofe of that fweet Songfierand Nurfe 
of Wit and Humour, Mafler William 
Shakefpeare. EmbellKhed with Cuts, 
and illuftiated with Notes and Maxims, 
Hiftorical, Philofophical, and Cntiral. 


BOOKS Sold by I. THOMAS. 

Lttle ROBIN RED BREAST ; a Col- 
leftion of pretty Songs, for Children, 
entirely new. 

The Hiftory of little GOODY TWO 
SHOES ; otherwife called Mrs. Mar- 
CERY Two Shoes— With the means 
by which (he acquired her Learning 
and Wifdom, and in confequence there- 
of her Effate. 

TOM THUMB'S EXHIBITION ; be- 
ing an account of many valuable and 
furprifing Curiofities which he has col- 
letted in the Courfeof his Travels, for 
ihe Inftruftion and Amufement of the 
American Youth. 

The FAIRING : Or, a golden Toy for 
Children of all Sizes and Denomina- 
tions. 

In yAdch they may fee all the Fun of the Fair, 

AndatHome be as happy as if they were there. 

The SUGAR PLUMB ; or Sweet A- 
mufement for Leifure Hours : Being 
an Entertaining and inftruftive Collec- 
tioi\ of Stories. Embelliihed with cu- 
Xious Cuts. 



{IjVi 



